*nod* Agreed with Oddcult. Often what he says has just enough truth (or possibility of truth) in it that it hooks the more gullible. Nothing like Repteloids or that the center of the earth is hollow, but stuff like Sandy Hook being a false flag operation or 9-11 being an inside job.

My friend who lives near Watford wrote his own really bad badge that said "PRESS" on it and managed to walk into the press pack at the Bilderberg conference. He has a few photos of Alex Jones doing interviews, and various dignitaries turning up.

Yea the most powerful people and top elected representatives, people who the population pay to act on their behalf, meet in private, Yea, that doesn't give me an uneasy feeling. What could they possibly have to discuss that would effect anyones life.

A man has been warned by West Midlands Police after he dialled 999 to complain about a prostitute's looks after meeting her outside a hotel.The force said they were contacted by the caller who said he "wished to report her for breaching the Sale of Goods Act".An officer in the call centre at Solihull, Birmingham, responded by telling the man the woman had not committed any offences and explained to him that soliciting for sex was illegal.The force has now sent the man a letter warning him about wasting police time.

As of this writing, Pakistan is by volume the world leader for Google searches of the terms "shemale sex," "teen anal sex," and "man fucking man," according to Google Trends. Pakistan also ranks second in the world (after similarly gay-intolerant Kenya) for volume of searches for the search term "gay sex pics."

In its report, Pew noted that countries exhibiting the highest levels of gay tolerance are largely secular, whereas nations where religion is central to public life—such as Egypt, Nigeria, and Pakistan—tend to reject homosexuality. But in Pakistan, what's even more peculiar is that the highest number of hits for some of these terms, including "shemale sex," come not from Pakistan's cosmopolitan centers, but from Peshawar, a bastion of conservative Islam, lately known in the West as a counterterrorism frontline.

At one stage a bearded middle-aged man draped himself over the plough of one of the water cannons to try to prevent it moving forwards before he was beaten back by batons and gas. Protesters sought refuge in hotels and cafes, including hundreds in the Divan hotel, which was stormed by police.

Later police stormed the hotel beating protesters, while a later assault left the lobby of the luxury hotel thick with gas. The Observer saw two elderly women who had passed out being carried out on stretchers to an ambulance.

Apparently, the police is still patrolling the street this morning, as you can see on this live stream.